Botticelli Inc. was organized in late 2015 to manufacture and sell hosiery. At the end of its
Question:
The company has decided to expand operations and has applied for a sizable bank loan. The bank officer has indicated that the records should be audited and presented in comparative statements to facilitate analysis by the bank. Botticelli Inc. therefore hired the auditing firm of Check & Doublecheck Co. and has provided the following additional information.
1. In early 2016, Botticelli Inc. changed its estimate from 2% of sales to 1% on the amount of bad debt expense to be charged to operations. Bad debt expense for 2015, if a 1% rate had been used, would have been $10,000. The company therefore restated its net income for 2015.
2. In 2018, the auditor discovered that the company had changed its method of inventory pricing from LIFO to FIFO. The effect on the income statements for the previous years is as follows.
3. In 2018, the auditor discovered that:
(a) The company incorrectly overstated the ending inventory (under both LIFO and FIFO) by $14,000 in 2017.
(b) A dispute developed in 2016 with the Internal Revenue Service over the deductibility of entertainment expenses. In 2015, the company was not permitted these deductions, but a tax settlement was reached in 2018 that allowed these expenses. As a result of the court's finding, tax expenses in 2018 were reduced by $60,000.
Instructions
(a) Indicate how each of these changes or corrections should be handled in the accounting records. (Ignore income tax considerations.)
(b) Present net income as reported in comparative income statements for the years 2015 to 2018.
The ending inventory is the amount of inventory that a business is required to present on its balance sheet. It can be calculated using the ending inventory formula Ending Inventory Formula =...
Step by Step Answer:
Intermediate Accounting
ISBN: 978-1118742976
16th edition
Authors: Donald E. Kieso, Jerry J. Weygandt, Terry D. Warfield